Tenné

Brown is sometimes, but very rarely, seen as a real heraldic colour and is then called Brunâtre ("brownish") in French and German blazons.

Contents

Etymology1

Hatchings2

In theory and in practice3

In Britain4

In continental Europe5

In Australia6

In South Africa7

In the United States8

In fictional media9

Examples10

See also11

References12

Etymology

In the Oxford English Dictionary, tenné is described as "orange-brown, as a stain used in blazoning", and as a mid-16th century variant of Old Frenchtané.[1][2] The origin of both tenné and tawny is the Medieval Latin word tannare, meaning to tan leather.[4]

Hatchings

Perhaps as a symptom of the theoretical nature of heraldic stains, the hatchings assigned to these have been inconsistent among sources. The hatching for tenné has been given variously as a combination of vertical lines (as gules) and dexter to sinister lines (as vert),[5] or as a combination of horizontal lines (as azure) and sinister to dexter lines (as purpure),[6] (and other combinations may be found in other sources) though both these sources provide the same hatching of alternating vertical dots and dashes for "orange".[7]

In theory and in practice

While tenné is frequently mentioned in books about heraldry, it is not among the basic heraldic colours and its appearance in practice is quite rare. Arthur Charles Fox-Davies, in his Complete Guide to Heraldry, asserted that both tenné and murrey were probably inventions of the theoretical (though never shown in actual practice) system of abatements, further commenting that he knew of only one instance of tenné to date (as of 1909), and that was in an estate livery rather than coat armory.[8]The Oxford Guide to Heraldry cites a late-14th century English treatise as stating that in addition to the two metals and five colours, a colour called tawny was "borne only in the Empire and France," the Oxford Guide also citing Gerard Leigh's The Accendance of Armory (1562) as rejecting tenné or tawny as non-existent and sanguine or murrey as mistaken purpure.[9]

In Britain

Coat of arms of West Yorkshire, supported by a lion per fess gules and sable (dexter) and a lion per fess tenne and vert (sinister), with a lion per fess gules and tenne in crest

Despite its role in the system of theoretical abatements of honour introduced in the 16th century,[10] tenné is quite rare in British armory, appearing only occasionally in liveries and never as a colour upon the escutcheon. The Oxford Guide to Heraldry notes that the "stains" (tenné, murrey and sanguine) "occur occasionally in the twentieth century but have never been spotted in a Visitation record."[11] Fox-Davies named the estate livery of Lord Fitzhardinge, worn by the lord's hunt servants, as the only known occurrence of "orange-tawny" in British armory.[12] To this, Woodward was able to add the standards of both the Earl of Derby, bearing the Stanley crest upon a field of tawny and vert, and the Earl of Northumberland, bearing "four horizontal bands, the upper being russet, the two central ones yellow, and the lowest tawny."[13] The Coat of arms of West Yorkshire (1975–1986) was supported on the sinister side by a lion per fess tenne and vert, with a lion per fess gules and tenne in crest.[14]

According to the Heraldry Society of Scotland, the team colours of the Dundee United Football Club should be called "tenny and argent".[15] Dundee United calls the colours tangerine and white, and the team is referred to as "the tangerines."[16]

In continental Europe

According to the Oxford Guide to Heraldry, a late-14th century English treatise on heraldry stated that a colour called tawny was "borne only in the Empire and France."[9] Fox-Davies suggested that orange, as it appears in German heraldry, may be a different colour than tenné, noting that a different hatching is associated with German orange than that of British tenné.[17] German heraldic author Ottfried Neubecker also noted a distinction between orange and brown or tenné, showing the usual hatching for tenné but a distinctive hatching of alternating vertical dots and dashes for orange.[18] Orangé, tanné and tenné appear in the civic arms of several communes in the Department of Oise in France.[19]

In French heraldry, tenné is traditionally a dark brown or orange brown. It is sometimes just light enough to be distinguished from the darkest heraldic colour, sable (black). It takes its name from the colour of tanned leather.[20] This dark brown colour, blazoned tenné in French, occurs in the field of the arms of the French commune of Maruéjols-lès-Gardon. A lighter tan colour is blazoned tanné in French.[21] This tanné colour occurs in the dexter chief quarter of the arms the commune of La Neuville-Roy. The colour orange is also used in French heraldry, usually blazoned as orangé. The field of the arms of the French commune of Lamorlaye is orangé. In English heraldry, all these colours are sometimes called tenné.

In the United States

Arms of the 1st Signal Battalion: Per bend argent and tenné[23]

Tenné (so blazoned) is found in the arms and colours of some U.S. military units, particularly in the Signal Corps, where the colour is shown as a bright shade of orange, and the Cavalry, where tenné is sometimes called "dragoon yellow".

The coat of arms of the 1st Signal Battalion, designed in 1932 by the U.S. Army Heraldic Program Office (since 1960 called the Institute of Heraldry) is per bend argent and tenné, since orange and white are the traditional colours of the Signal Corps.[23] These colours are repeated in the arms of virtually every battalion in the Signal Corps.[24]

The 1st Cavalry Regiment (also known as the 1st Regiment of Dragoons) was assigned a coat of arms by the Heraldic Program Office in 1921 featuring a gold dragon on a field of tenné. The 1st Cavalry was founded as the Regiment of United States Dragoons in 1833, and at the time the dragoon units wore a cord of tenné (which they called "dragoon yellow") and Or (gold). These are also the colours of the torse in the coat of arms of the unit.[25]

^Fox-Davies, on p. 72, uses orange and tenné synonymously and in the next sentence defines tenné as "an orange-tawny colour." Leigh, as quoted by Woodcock & Robinson, on p. 52, defines tenne as "orenge colour"[sic]. Neubecker, on p. 86, on the other hand, equates tenné with brown, as distinct from orange.

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